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#Post#: 63--------------------------------------------------
The impact of artificial intelligence on society and economy
By: chandna rani Date: September 9, 2023, 3:56 am
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Except that Russia sought to build an empire precisely through
control of grain. Its expansion in the steppes, in Central Asia
and later in Poland and Ukraine pursued precisely that
objective: of course, wheat was considered an instrument
suitable for guaranteeing the internal social order, as in
Europe, but it was also a tool for the conquest of vast
territories: the transformation of large spaces populated by
alleged "nomads" or rebellious owners of Poland and Ukraine into
areas of extensive cereal cultivation was a tool for
consolidating Russian imperial power7.
In this configuration, the production and control of wheat were
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instruments of pressure on Europe in the
event of war or poor harvest. From Peter the Great to Catherine
and also later, Russia marketed its wheat according to methods
that in no way coincided with what Immanuel Wallerstein had
pointed out, namely, a quasi-periphery subject to Europe in the
process of industrializing.8. On the contrary, its territorial
extension and the importance of its wheat for Europe offered the
Russian Empire formidable tools of pressure.
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Which was true for social and political balance, but also for
the military effort. In fact, wheat and cereals in general
forced all the powers of the time to seek a difficult balance
between the need to feed increasingly imposing armies (men and
horses), the alliance with the landowning elites, the supply of
the cities and the management of the peasantry, the latter being
at the same time a producer, a source of income for the nobles
and for the State, but also an indispensable base for military
recruitment. What distinguished the different countries was the
balance between these elements.
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